Last night a tremendous electric storm, normal Stu tells me, but quite spectacular nontheless. The tornadoes, if there were any, missed us. I blogged earlier in the trip about riding, I think along Natchez Trace Parkway, through a section of forest torn to pieces by tornadoes; the awesome power of nature.
At one point last weekend I told my daughter that I might well chin the next person to use the word awesome in my presence, but then someone I couldn't possibly offend used it; so I just gave up and resigned myself to another word so abused it no longer has any meaning.
Two natural phenomena of America take my thoughts today, last day here. Trees and Turkey Vultures.
America, or at least much of those parts I have visited, is an extraordinarily verdant land. I will remember the huge forests I travelled through. Mile upon mile as the Blue Monster sped along. Also the extraordinary rivers which even by the standards of Europe's big rivers are phenomenal. I remember crossing the Tennessee on the Natchez Trace, I suppose 300 or 400 miles away from the sea, and it was half a mile wide at least.
Forests and rivers. What a land it must have seemed to the Europeans when they arrived. What a land it was for its inhabitants, living there in harmony and balance. What a land it still is. For those with the resources to enjoy it that is. Like many places, I guess, they can be heaven or hell depending upon your resources. The beauty of largely untamed nature cascading around you; or a prison of no work, no transport, and debilitating poverty. Rural poverty hits you just as much as urban here. Whose eyes do we see the world through?
The little history of modern America, by which I mean the past 350 years, I have absorbed in my time here has resonated with a previous story of a pioneer nation somewhere in my past. Such space, such opportunity, such achievement, such a shame its all going down the tubes.
The Turkey Vultures were first pointed out to me by Stu soon after my arrival and I soon found them to be ubiquitous. They became a symbol, a metaphor for the gathering crisis. Just about everywhere I travelled they were always there in the skies, circling, watching.
Just as I had one or two close encounters with the detritus of the Empire's decline: people, essentially, surplus to requirements; so I had a couple of close encounters with the Vultures. One occasion I saw them on a carcass right in the centre of the road, some 200 metres ahead. Boy did they take their time getting out of the way. You would have thought the sight of the Blue Monster bearing down on you at 50 mph or so would have spurred them into flight, but none of it. At the very last moment a flap of, what you realise at close quarters are very large, wings and they just got clear in time. I would like to swear I could have reached out and touched them. Maybe I could have, but I would have been in the ditch next moment.
I have tried to teach the Americans I have met that wonderful idiomatic English phrase, 'It'll end in tears'. And sadly I think it will. But right now its hard not to allow the optimism that drives us on to force its way to the surface.
The sun has just broken through, if I am lucky enough to get a window seat tomorrow afternoon I might just get a good view of the north-eastern coast as I fly off. The Wall Street Occupiers have not been evicted. You have to have hope, you have to keep trying, you have to keep going.
I will leave the last word to the poet:
I have tried to teach the Americans I have met that wonderful idiomatic English phrase, 'It'll end in tears'. And sadly I think it will. But right now its hard not to allow the optimism that drives us on to force its way to the surface.
The sun has just broken through, if I am lucky enough to get a window seat tomorrow afternoon I might just get a good view of the north-eastern coast as I fly off. The Wall Street Occupiers have not been evicted. You have to have hope, you have to keep trying, you have to keep going.
I will leave the last word to the poet:
I sit by the roadside
The driver changes the wheel
I do not like the place I have come from.
I do not like the place I am going to.
Why with impatience do I
Watch him changing the wheel?